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the giver one pager assignment

The Giver: 8 Creative Class Activities

The Giver by Lois Lowry is a teacher’s dream novel. The complex dystopian plotline, dynamic characters, and thought-provoking themes provide so many opportunities for teachers to foster text-to-self and text-to-world connections. Critical thinking activities that allow students to empathize with the characters are a must-have in any novel unit. Below are 8 of my favorite activities for The Giver   that do just that.  

1. The Ceremony of 12 Simulation

This first activity is always a class favorite. It allows students to empathize with Jonas and his friends as they are assigned careers by the Chief Elder during the Ceremony of 12 .

How This Activity Works:

Welcome students to the classroom with a colorful poster for The Ceremony of Twelve. Once they are all settled, immediately transform into The Chief Elder. Address the class explaining that although they have spent the last 11 years learning to fit in and standardize their behavior, that this ceremony will celebrate their differences. Then, one-by-one present each student with their new job and a designated card that states all of the roles and responsibilities. After each student gets their assignment, have the rest of the class say in unison, “Thank you for your childhood.”

Give your students a choice of assignment. They can either fill out an application for a job switch or write a journal discussing their feelings on their new role in the community!

The Giver Ceremony of 12 Activity

2. Seeing Beyond Activity

In The Giver , Jonas has the capacity to ‘see beyond.’ This means that Jonas, unlike the other members of the community, can use his senses from memory that allow him the ability to see color. This fun, seeing beyond class activity allows students to step into Jonas’ shoes to understand his ability to see beyond.

Students enter the classroom to a colorful poster welcoming them to Seeing Beyond. Ask them to circulate the room to different areas that have hidden image optical illusions. Some will be able to see the hidden pictures, while others will not.

After the activity, students work with partners to discuss how they felt when they were or were not able to see the hidden image. They will also discuss how it felt to successfully or unsuccessfully help someone else see the image and how this relates to the novel.

The Giver Seeing Beyond Activity

3. Memory Transmission Activity

Through his role as The Receiver, Jonas receives transmitted memories of the past from The Giver. This FREE memory transmission activity allows students to empathize with both Jonas and The Giver as they will both receive and transmit memories. This one has always been a real hit with my students!

The Giver Memory Transmission Activity

Put a colorful poster on the door welcoming your class to The Giver’s Annex. Then, transform into The Giver and give each group of students descriptions of new memories that Jonas will receive.

Some of the memories involve painful memories, like homelessness, while others involve more positive memories like Neil Armstrong’s arrival on the moon! Students discuss prompting questions that will have them understand the value of keeping the world’s memories safe. After all the memories have been transmitted, they will shift into the role of The Giver. In this role, they will transmit one important historical memory to Jonas of their choosing.

Memory Transmission Free Activity

4. The House of Old Activity

The elderly in The Giver are seemingly treated with the utmost respect and care in The House of Old , but the reader soon learns that things are not as positive as they appear. The elders of the community are killed (a.k.a released from society). This activity allows students to examine how the elderly are treated in different cultures/countries in the world and how this compares to how they are treated in Jonas’ community.

Students will enter the classroom to a colorful poster welcoming them to The House Of Old. They participate in small group discussions with information cards that provide details about how the elderly are treated in different cultures. When they are done, they fill in the blank card with how the elderly are treated in the novel and share with the rest of the class!

Welcome to the House of Old

5. Dream Sharing Activity

In Jonas’ community, everyone must share any dreams they have with their family members. On the surface, dream sharing seems like a good way to keep open communication about inner feelings. In reality, however, it is another way that the government can keep control of the thoughts of their citizens and squash any independent thinking. This activity allows students to interpret their own dreams and consider what deeper meaning their dreams may have.

After reading chapter 6, a poster welcoming them to Dream Sharing greets students at the door. Break the class up into groups of 4 and tell each group to imagine they are family members. Each group receives dream prompt cards with common topics for dreams that have symbolic meanings. Each student shares a dream they remember which connects with one of the topics. If they can’t connect with any topic, they can share any dream they remember.

After everyone has shared their dreams, give each group the Dream Interpretation Cards that explain the symbolic significance of each dream topic. Students discuss and reflect on how it felt to reveal a dream and consider whether or not this would be a good practice in their everyday life.

The Giver Dream Sharing

6. A World Without Pain Activity

In Jonas’ community, members are sheltered from feeling any physical or emotional pain. While this theoretically seems like a peaceful way to live, Jonas soon learns that feeling no pain desensitizes people and doesn’t allow them to appreciate positive emotions. From pain, people are also able to learn from mistakes and avoid making those same mistakes again in the future. This activity brings this idea to the forefront by showing students a real-life example of someone who feels no pain.

Students work in groups to read information about people who feel no physical pain. You could have them research Gabby Gingras or Ashlyn Blocker, for example. As a group, students discuss whether or not they would like to live a life without physical pain and what challenges they might face if they chose yes. Then, they work with their group to brainstorm a list of advantages and disadvantages to living a life free of emotional pain.

No Pain Activity

7. The Telling of Feelings Activity

Jonas and his family participate in a nightly ritual called The Telling of Feelings  where each person describes an emotion that they experienced during the day and discusses it with the others. Help students understand what this ritual would be like by forming classroom families and simulating the practice.

After reading chapter 2, put students into groups. It is preferable that groups consist of two boys and two girls, but it isn’t necessary. Tell them that the group is their new family and they are to assign roles (parents and siblings).

Each student gets a “Feelings Card” that they fill out in preparation for the ritual. Students must choose a precise word that describes a feeling they had that day. Each member of the group shares their feelings while the other members listen carefully.

After the ritual, have students discuss whether or not they could see themselves doing this with their family, if it would make a family closer, and why they think this is a required ritual in Jonas’ community.

Telling of Feelings Activity Lois Lowry

8. Family Forming Activity

In The Giver , couples can only have 2 children as mandated by the government. While this may seem completely removed from the modern-day, this activity will teach students about China’s one-child policy and allow them to consider how it relates to the novel.

This activity works best with a bit of pre-reading discussion. Students discuss how they would react if the government limited the number of children they could have. Ask them if they think this could or would ever happen.

After some discussion, have them read an article or watch a video on China’s one-child policy. I have students record their thoughts as they read using a graphic organizer. The one I use has them consider their thoughts, what they learned, and something that surprised them. Ask students to make a connection between this policy and the events of the novel.

The Giver family forming activity

Grab a ready-to-use unit plan with over everything you need to teach  T he Giver (340 pages/slides of eye-catching powerpoints, printable assignments, questions, vocabulary, and interactive class activities) by  clicking here .

The Giver Unit Plan

I hope you found this helpful! If you are interested in more tips and resources for developing students’ reading skills in ELA, click here.

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5 Engaging Activities to Teach The Giver

After jumping into the world of middle school ELA, I have to say that The Giver is my new Gatsby . In other words, it’s my new favorite whole-class novel. It’s even better than Gatsby (sorry, old sport), and it’s such a gem of a book that it just might keep me teaching middle school forever! The Giver is engaging, thought-provoking, and accessible! My favorite part of teaching it is watching how inquisitive, curious, and invested my students become as they read. The book definitely sparks a lot of curiosity on its own, but I deliberately teach this book to hook and engage students from the start! I love to play up the “mystery” of it all, encourage students to ask lots of questions, take note of all the interesting things they observe, and start guessing about what’s really going on in the community. 

If you’re ready to similarly engage your students, then here are 5 of my favorite activities for teaching The Giver !

5 Engaging Activities to Teach The Giver

1. PRE-READING LEARNING STATIONS

the giver one pager assignment

Learning stations are my favorite strategy for hooking my students before reading. They’re so versatile, engaging, and effective that I use them at the beginning of almost every single unit/novel! A good set of pre-reading learning stations will preview essential background information AND spark students’ curiosity before they have a chance to turn to page 1. 

For The Giver, here’s what that looks like:

  • Students learn about the genre (dystopian/science-fiction).
  • Students debate essential questions through an engaging anticipation guide.
  • Students explore the differences between utopias and dystopias.
  • Students preview and react to a few of the community’s strict rules.
  • Students play a creative word challenge game designed to get them thinking about the power of language in the book!

As you can see, these activities hook and prepare students for further reading! These print/digital pre-reading learning stations are available separately HERE or bundled with other resources for The Giver HERE. For more information about creating your own learning stations, check out the following blog posts:

  • 10 Reasons to Implement Learning Stations
  • How to Create Engaging Learning Stations
  • How to Facilitate Successful Learning Stations
  • 10 Ideas for Virtual Learning Stations

2. MOCK CEREMONY OF 12

Chapter 8 of The Giver is practically begging to be acted out in front of an audience of middle schoolers, so take advantage of this and host your own mock Ceremony of 12. It’s a tiny bit of extra effort and work, but I promise you it’s worth the memorable experience. Not to mention, a mock ceremony is a great way to review the chapter, spark connections, and facilitate rich discussions! Here’s what I did to host our Ceremony of 12:

  • I created Assignment cards for different jobs in the community. During the ceremony, I assigned these randomly!
  • I wrote up a script so I didn’t have to totally wing it as the Chief Elder.
  • I designed ceremony programs for my students, so they could follow along during the ceremony. These programs also prompted them to answer a few essential questions and reflect on the chapter/ceremony.

On the day of the ceremony, I donned a black gown (from my college graduation) and a wig (at my students’ request). I also sported a gavel just for fun, and of course, I acted as ridiculous as possible. The whole experience was so much fun for me and my students! 10/10, definitely recommend!

You can find all of these mock ceremony materials, as well as thorough teacher instructions, in this growing unit bundle for The Giver.

3. QUESTION TRAIL

A question trail is my go-to activity to mix things up and break the normal routines of any novel unit! If you’re unfamiliar with it, a question trail is a unique, kinesthetic activity that gets students up and moving on a “trail” of questions around the classroom. 

the giver one pager assignment

This activity consists of different multiple choice “stations” or “spots” around the room. At each station, students answer a multiple-choice question. Each answer (a, b, c, or d) will send the students to a different station. If students answer each question correctly, they will travel to each station and complete a full circuit. If students answer a question incorrectly, they will eventually find themselves at a station they’ve already completed, which tells them that they need to backtrack. This gives you clear, immediate feedback so you can see who is getting it (“on the trail”) vs. who is not (“off the trail”).

This means a question trail is a great way to review a chapter with both comprehension and analysis questions. I like to do a question trail after Chapters 16-17 of The Giver, just to make sure students are understanding the book and the standards we are practicing before the climax in Chapter 19. Of course, you can create your own question trail for any chapter/s in the book. If you’re interested in my student-ready question trail for Chapters 16-17 of The Giver, you can check it out HERE. To learn more about how to create question trails, head to this blog post.

4. ACTING OUT CHAPTER 19

When you spend so much time cultivating students’ curiosity and playing up the mystery of “release,” it only makes sense to do this dramatic chapter justice! My students read most of the book for reading homework, but I purposefully do not assign Chapter 19 as reading homework! I selfishly want to witness their reactions to learning what “release” really means. To make the most of this scene, I like to transform the chapter into a script and have students act it out in front of the class. 

Don’t feel pressured to buy props or get too fancy.  In fact, using baby dolls as props might be taking it too far! Because it was 2021, my class ended up using two identical bottles of sanitizer spray for the newchildren twins. Yep, it got that weird, but it was hilarious. If your students are anything like mine, this will make for a memorable reading experience and give you a great chance to reflect, discuss, and process the chapter after the acting!

5. THE GIVER FILM ANALYSIS

the giver one pager assignment

I absolutely love facilitating film analysis during/after reading novels, and The Giver is no exception! Film analysis is an engaging, accessible way to scaffold the challenging skill of literary analysis. With the right structure, guidance, and questions, watching a movie can prompt critical thinking and spark rich discussions. I know many fellow ELA teachers don’t like the film adaptation of The Giver because it changes so much from the book, but I think it offers the perfect opportunity for discussion & analysis. 

In addition to asking students to compare/contrast the text and the film, try asking them why they think the film directors made certain changes and how these changes affect the audience. These kinds of questions spark more thoughtful insight and engaging discussions. For print/digital worksheets with these types of questions, check out these The Giver Film Analysis resources. For more information on successfully facilitating film analysis for any novel, head to this blog post!

I hope these ideas help you jumpstart your unit planning for The Giver ! For more engaging activities and resources for teaching this book, check out this growing unit bundle full of learning stations, quickwrites, vocabulary resources, and more! If you have any questions about these activities or how I teach The Giver, leave them below and I’ll do my best to answer. 🙂

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The Giver One Pager - Utopia Project

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Description

After reading the novel, The Giver , have your students make their thinking visual by creating a One-Pager on what they infer are the core values of Jonas’ community as well as what Jonas’ community looked like. This activity spirals through inferencing skills as well as help students support their inferences with textual evidence instead of replying on their own thoughts and opinions.

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One Pager Project for Any Novel

Description.

With this  one-pager reading comprehension project,  your students will share their understanding of  any novel  by imaginatively blending their written ideas with colorful images. The one pager is a great idea for any novel study as an after reading assignment or as a creative assessment. Students’ artwork also make great bulletin boards!

Included in this purchase is:

  • Student directions for the one pager project (PDF Ready to Print)
  • Rubric for the one pager project (PDF Ready to Print)
  • 1 Example one pager (based on the novel  Speak  by Laurie Halse Anderson)
  • 10 Blank templates (printable & optional)
  • EDITABLE Word Document in case you would like to modify the directions or rubric

Students are encouraged to include several of these literary elements into their final projects:  theme, main idea, point of view, foreshadowing, symbolism, conflict, mood, tone, irony, characterization, and imagery.

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Night One Pager: Assigning a One-Pager Project as a Culminating Project

Assigning a One-Pager as a Culminating Project. A one pager project for Night

I recently assigned a one pager final project to my sophomores for their culminating Night project. I wanted to combine as many rigorous ELA content ideas as possible, while also designing a fun project for students that provided them with a bit of choice. This Night one pager project was the perfect way to finish the memoir!

To make this one pager project rigorous, I required my students to include multiple MLA-cited quotations with a literary analysis explanation. These are skills my students have learned and practiced all year long, so it was a way for me to assess that skill. I also wanted to give my students an opportunity to express their creativity, and it came through. In considering all of these elements, the one pager was the perfect culminating activity for Night!

What is a One Pager?

A one pager is a classroom assignment, activity, or assessment where students place all of their work on one page. With a one pager, students combine visual and text elements to demonstrate a thematic and symbolic meaning of a text. A one pager can include quotes from a text, quote analysis, critical thinking questions and answers, and visual representations of a setting, symbol, or character.

Furthermore, the one pager is also extremely versatile, and teachers can tailor it to fit their needs. You can read more about the one pager, sketch notes, and mind maps in this blog about coloring in the secondary ELA classroom .

Assigning a One Pager Project as a Culminating Activity for Night

For the actual assignment, I created a one-pager choice board that is similar that requires students to connect four elements. Every student had to complete the quotes, questions, and images element of the project. From there, students had their choice of four different items they could include: a connection to a song, a timeline, a setting, or a figurative language option. By providing students with a choice, they feel like they have more say with their work.

I reviewed the assignment with my students, explained my expectations, passed out the handout (which was printed double-sided with the instructions on the front and the brainstorming organizer and checklist on the back), and showed my students some examples. Keep reading the post. You can sign-up for my emails to receive a free Google Docs copy of this assignment which includes the assignment, checklist, planning sheet, and a rubric.

Slide17 1

On the day projects were due, I provided my students with an opportunity to present their one-page to class. I did this as an extra-credit option. For each student who volunteered to present their project, I gave them an extra 5 points on their project).

The Night One-Pager was an enjoyable project for my students, and it was the perfect final project to assign at the end of the school year.

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Teaching Night in the High School Classroom

When I teach Night to my sophomores, I use this Night Teaching Unit that includes a 5-week pacing guide.

This Night Activities Bundle includes pre-reading, during reading, and post-reading activities to use when teaching Night. This Night Teaching Unit Begin includes teaching resources and activities for you to complete with your students before, during, and after you read Night.

Assigning a One-Pager as a Culminating Project

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the giver one pager assignment

Ask LitCharts AI: The answer to your questions

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Assignments

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Assignments are the occupations of the inhabitants of the Community . Assignments are designated when a member of the Community goes through their respective Ceremony of Twelve .

All Assignments can be found here .

  • 1.1 The Giver

History [ ]

The giver [ ].

Claire is given the Assignment of Birthmother at the Ceremony of Twelve.

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  • Assignments are made by the Elders may be appealed by contacting them, who form a committee to discuss it. Committees typically take a large amount of time to decide so an appeal is considered to be impractical.

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  2. One-Pagers as a Response to Literature

    the giver one pager assignment

  3. The Giver

    the giver one pager assignment

  4. The Giver Collaborative Poster Project: Engage, Write, & Decorate with

    the giver one pager assignment

  5. The Giver One Pager Project by Chomping at the Lit

    the giver one pager assignment

  6. The Giver Novel Study Resources in 2021

    the giver one pager assignment

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COMMENTS

  1. The Giver One Pager Project

    With this one-pager reading comprehension project, students will analyze literary elements from The Giver as well as share their own personal responses to the book. This activity is the perfect addition to your dystopian novel study! Students' final masterpieces make beautiful bulletin boards! Included in this purchase is: You May Also Like!

  2. The Giver One Pager Project by Chomping at the Lit

    This resource includes SIX Full Weeks of content for the novel The Giver by Lois Lowry.Additionally, in this UNIT PLAN BUNDLE, you will receive a teacher guide that encompasses an example Unit Schedule/ Pacing Guide!You can purchase each lesson individually (listed below) or save money and get the B. 12. Products. $19.99 $30.92 Save $10.93.

  3. One Pager Directions and Rubric

    3_one-pager_cheat_sheet.pdf: File Size: 342 kb: File Type: pdf: ... You received a journal prompt regarding rules in The Giver and rules in our society/school. 2 full paragraphs FOLLOW THE DIRECTIONS ON THE FIRST TWO BULLET POINTS. ... Be ready for a writing assignment on Monday/Tuesday. 1/22: Students will read chapters 2, 3 and 4. Discussion ...

  4. PDF Grade ELA Unit The Giver

    Resource 3.5B The Giver Job Assignments . 51 . Resource 3.6 The Giver Job Assignment Activity . 52-55 . Resource 3.7 Non-Fiction Reading Activity for The Giver . 57-59 . ... one's rights and freedoms would be gone, a place where the environment would be devastated. Dystopia is created from the Greek prefix "dys" meaning . bad, harsh

  5. 8 Creative Activities to Teach The Giver (by Lois Lowry)

    8. Family Forming Activity. In The Giver, couples can only have 2 children as mandated by the government. While this may seem completely removed from the modern-day, this activity will teach students about China's one-child policy and allow them to consider how it relates to the novel. How This Activity Works:

  6. 5 Engaging Activities to Teach The Giver

    If you're ready to similarly engage your students, then here are 5 of my favorite activities for teaching The Giver! 5 Engaging Activities to Teach The Giver. 1. PRE-READING LEARNING STATIONS. The Giver Pre-Reading Learning Stations. Learning stations are my favorite strategy for hooking my students before reading.

  7. The Giver One Page Project by Marvelous in the Middle

    Try a one page project! Students combine visuals and words from The Giver to show their understanding of the major themes and symbols of the novel. Students enjoy the freedom this project gives them! Includes directions, samples, and rubric. PDF and editable Google versions included to fit teacher needs! For personal use only. Total Pages.

  8. PDF UNIT: THE GIVER

    English Language Arts, Grade 7: The Giver 116 UNIT: THE GIVER ANCHOR TEXT1 The Giver by Lois Lowry (literary) RELATED TEXTS . Literary Texts (Fiction) ... Provide at least one detail from both texts to support your response. (RL.7.1, RL.7.2, RL.7.6, RL.7.10, W.7.9a) 3. Select one of the memories Lois Lowry shares in her acceptance speech.

  9. Why One-Pagers Are Awesome

    In ELA, one-pagers are often used to interpret and analyze a theme or character development in a narrative text or the main idea of an informational text. Either way, this activity is all about helping students process a text thoughtfully. Students must engage in critical thought as they carefully select what goes on the one-pager.

  10. The Giver One Pager

    Description. After reading the novel, The Giver, have your students make their thinking visual by creating a One-Pager on what they infer are the core values of Jonas' community as well as what Jonas' community looked like. This activity spirals through inferencing skills as well as help students support their inferences with textual ...

  11. One Pager Project for Any Novel

    Description. With this one-pager reading comprehension project, your students will share their understanding of any novel by imaginatively blending their written ideas with colorful images.The one pager is a great idea for any novel study as an after reading assignment or as a creative assessment. Students' artwork also make great bulletin boards!

  12. PDF The Giver Final Projects

    The Giver Final Projects. DUE: January 13th/14th 2016. As a conclusion to our study of the novel, The Giver, you will complete 2 of the assignments listed below. Be prepared to share at least one of your assignments with the class. All projects requiring writing must be TYPED, 12 PT SIZE, PERSONAL CHOICE.

  13. The Giver, Full Text

    The giver / by Lois Lowry. cm. Summary: Given his lifetime assignment at the Ceremony of Twelve, Jonas becomes the receiver of memories shared by only one other in his community and discovers the terrible truth about the society in which he lives. ISBN -395-64566-2. [1.

  14. How are assignments determined in The Giver?

    Expert Answers. Assignments are "secret selections" made by the Committee of Elders in order to determine what individuals will do in their lives. In order to make their selections, the Elders ...

  15. PDF The Giver

    Welcome to the Teacher Guide for Intercambio's® Level 6 Book Club. This guide contains information for you to feel confident and successful in teaching the novel The Giver by Lois Lowry. Many students in this class have worked their way through various levels of Intercambio's® Confidence and ConnectionsTM curriculum (Intro-Level 5).

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    A one pager is a classroom assignment, activity, or assessment where students place all of their work on one page. With a one pager, students combine visual and text elements to demonstrate a thematic and symbolic meaning of a text. A one pager can include quotes from a text, quote analysis, critical thinking questions and answers, and visual ...

  17. PDF The Giver (Giver Quartet, Book 1)

    frequently writing as a class assignment (one began, "This is a Friendly Letter"). Over the years, of course, they have more often become emails. But that didn't compare to the mail about The Giver: first of all for the volume—the sheer number of them (even now, twenty years later, they still come, sometimes fifty to sixty in a day).

  18. The Giver Chapter 9 Summary & Analysis

    Analysis. After leaving the Auditorium, the other Twelves talk excitedly about their new jobs. Jonas feels left out and strange. Even Asher acts differently and respectfully toward him. Jonas realizes that he won't share this job with anyone the way the other Twelves will. He feels uncomfortably different.

  19. The Giver: Full Book Summary

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  20. Assignments

    Assignments are the occupations of the inhabitants of the Community. Assignments are designated when a member of the Community goes through their respective Ceremony of Twelve. All Assignments can be found here. Claire is given the Assignment of Birthmother at the Ceremony of Twelve. Coming soon... Assignments are made by the Elders may be appealed by contacting them, who form a committee to ...

  21. Fiona Character Analysis in The Giver

    Fiona. Fiona is Jonas's friend and the object of his first glimmering of sexual interest. Fiona is a sweet, soft-spoken, and caring girl. Her kind nature is so obvious to others in the Community that it comes as no surprise when she is assigned the job of Caretaker of the Old at the Ceremony of Twelve, with Jonas commenting that the career ...

  22. What is Jonas's assignment in The Giver?

    The first answer is clearly correct. The job that Jonas is assigned to is the job of Receiver of Memory. The job of Receiver of Memory is unique in this community. It shows the essential weakness ...

  23. The Giver chapters 9-11 comprehension questions Flashcards

    The Giver chapters 9-11 comprehension questions. Tell how the Assignment of Receiver differs from other Assignments? Click the card to flip 👆. The training will be completely alone, and there is only one Receiver at a time. Jonas only received one page of his packet in training. Click the card to flip 👆.

  24. Political Typology Quiz

    Take our quiz to find out which one of our nine political typology groups is your best match, compared with a nationally representative survey of more than 10,000 U.S. adults by Pew Research Center. You may find some of these questions are difficult to answer. That's OK. In those cases, pick the answer that comes closest to your view, even if ...